The Yin and Yang jing transform to create and replenish each other. The Yang jing circulates through the eight extraordinary vessels and transforms to become and replenish yin; in turn the marrow becomes blood, body fluid and semen.[1]
Jing should not be confused with the related concept of Neijing (勁; "power"), nor with jīng (經; "classic"), which appears in many early Chinese book titles, such as the Huangdi Neijing, Yijing, and Chajing.[2]
The characteristics which constitute signs of good jing (e.g. facial structure, teeth, hair, strength of adrenals or Kidneys) share the embryological origin of neural crest cells. These cells undergo immense and challenging cellular migrations requiring great organisation. As such, jing may simply represent the strength of embryological self-organisation in the organism. This will be manifested most strongly in those cells which require most organisation; that is, the neural crest cells.[3]
One is said to be born with a fixed amount of jing (prenatal jing is sometimes called yuanqi) and also can acquire jing from food and various forms of stimulation (exercise, study, meditation.)
Jing is therefore considered quite important for longevity in traditional Chinese medicine (TCM); many disciplines related to qigong are devoted to the replenishment of "lost" jing by restoration of the post-natal jing and transformation of shen. In particular, the internal martial arts tai chi, the Circle Walking of Baguazhang and the middle path of Wuxingheqidao may be used to preserve pre-natal jing and build post-natal jing, if performed correctly. In Traditional Chinese herbal medicine Ginseng is widely used to bolster and support the jing or Essence.[4]
Jing is available for download as thefile jing-@VERSION@.zip, which contains binaries, source code anddocumentation. It requires a Java runtime compatible with the Java 2Platform, Standard Edition (J2SE) version 1.4 (or any later version),such as the Java Runtime Environment (JRE), which can bedownloaded here.
When you use jing.jar with the -jaroption, any jar files that have the same names as the jar filesincluded with the Jing download and are in the same directoryas jing.jar will be used automatically (i.e. they will beadded to the classpath), specifically:
Jing has practiced law in London, Beijing, Melbourne, and Hong Kong for more than a decade. She has advised Chinese and foreign companies and family offices on various outbound and inbound investment and global restructuring projects. These include greenfield, merger and acquisition, joint venture, pre-IPO investments and business restructuring, tax planning, family trust, ESOP, and general corporate and commercial legal matters, with a focus on the Greater Bay Area of China, Japan, and Southeast Asia.
Dr. Jing Hua is a Professor of Computer Science and the founding director of Computer Graphics and Visualization Lab (CGV) at Computer Science at Wayne State University (WSU). He received his Ph.D. degree (2004) in Computer Science from the State University of New York at Stony Brook. He also received his M.S. degree (1999) in Pattern Recognition and Artificial Intelligence from the Institute of Automation, Chinese Academy of Sciences in Beijing, China and his B.S. degree (1996) in Electrical Engineering from the Huazhong University of Science & Technology in Wuhan, China. He was an Assistant Professor from August 2004 to July 2009 and Associate Professor from August 2009 to July 2014 at WSU. His research interests lie in the areas of Computer Graphics and Visualization, Computer Vision, Image Analysis and Informatics, etc. He has authored over 150 papers in the above research fields in the journals and conferences. He received the Best Paper Award at ACM Solid Modeling 2004, the Gaheon Award for the Best Paper of International Journal of CAD/CAM in 2009, the WSU Faculty Research Award in 2005, the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Excellence in Teaching Award in 2008, the K. C. Wong Research Award in 2010, and the Best Demo Awards at GENI Engineering Conference 21 (2014) and 23 (2015), respectively. His research is supported by the National Science Foundation, National Institutes of Health, Michigan Technology Tri-Corridor, Michigan Economic Development Corporation, Ford Motor Company, and WSU. He serves as an Editorial Board Member for many journals as well as a Program Committee Member for many international conferences.
Dr. Dong received her PhD at Nanjing Medical University, China in 2012, then completed her training in epidemiology at National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences. Afterward, she was awarded by Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas to join a training program in integrative cancer epidemiology at Baylor College of Medicine. Her work has led to more than 60 publications in several major high-ranking journals in cancer and genetic epidemiology areas, such as Nat Genet., Nat Commun., and Gastroenterology. She also serves as a reviewer for more than 20 international peer-reviewed journals, including but not limited to Communications Biology, Clin Gastroenterol Hepatol., Carcinogenesis, and as editorial board of BMC Cancer, Annals of Translational Medicine and Journal of Cancer Research Forecast.
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